🍪 The GLP Lounge uses cookies to improve your experience, analyze traffic, and personalize content. By continuing to use this site, you agree to our Cookie Policy.
Evidence-based GLP-1 & peptide discussion since 2023
ForumsMASH / Liver DiseaseSemaglutide and MASH — anyone have experience? Page 2

Semaglutide and MASH — anyone have experience?

Dr.EM_Chicago Sun, May 3, 2026 at 3:38 PM 6 replies 526 viewsPage 2 of 2
pete_nash
Member
312
1,345
Aug 2024
Nashville, TN
May 3, 2026 at 6:28 PM#6

I'm a bit confused. I thought GLP-1 drugs were for weight loss and diabetes. How does something that reduces appetite protect the kidneys? What's the actual mechanism?

44 11Admin, Dr.Martinez, mike_mod and 41 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
DanielChem_CHI
Senior Member
1,234
5,678
Mar 2024
Chicago, IL
May 3, 2026 at 6:45 PM#7

Excellent question. The renal benefit likely involves multiple mechanisms beyond weight loss and glucose control:

  1. Reduced intraglomerular pressure: GLP-1 promotes natriuresis (sodium excretion) at the proximal tubule, which reduces glomerular hyperfiltration — a major driver of CKD progression
  2. Anti-inflammatory effects: CKD is characterized by chronic kidney inflammation. GLP-1 RAs reduce renal expression of inflammatory mediators (NF-κB, MCP-1)
  3. Anti-fibrotic effects: Preclinical data shows GLP-1 RAs reduce TGF-β signaling and renal fibrosis
  4. Improved endothelial function: Better renal blood flow autoregulation
  5. Metabolic improvements: Better glycemic control, reduced hyperinsulinemia, lower blood pressure, and improved lipids all independently benefit kidney health

GLP-1 receptors are expressed throughout the kidney, including in the proximal tubule, glomerular endothelium, and juxtaglomerular apparatus. So this is not just a systemic metabolic effect — there's direct renal pharmacology at work.

Last edited: May 3, 2026 at 8:45 PM
30 16Dr.DermMIA, fiona_VT, denise_HTX and 27 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
julia.endo
Senior Member
1,890
9,012
Feb 2024
Cincinnati, OH
May 3, 2026 at 7:02 PM#8

I'll add one more critical point: FLOW also showed a 20% reduction in all-cause mortality (HR 0.80; 95% CI, 0.67-0.95). This is arguably the most important finding because mortality is the hardest endpoint to move.

For a population with T2DM and CKD — which carries a 5-year mortality rate of 20-30% — a 20% relative mortality reduction translates to a meaningful number of lives saved. Combined with the evidence from SELECT (where semaglutide trended toward mortality reduction in the CV population), we're seeing a consistent signal that semaglutide extends life.

The early trial termination for efficacy should underscore the robustness of these findings. Data monitoring committees don't make that decision lightly — it means the evidence was so strong that it would have been unethical to continue withholding the drug from the placebo group.

23 22hans_munich, jason_sac26, chris_chi24 and 20 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
HPLC_Greg
Senior Member
1,890
8,901
Feb 2024
Research Triangle, NC
May 3, 2026 at 7:19 PM#9

Thank you all for this discussion. Very helpful for someone like me who is living with CKD and T2DM. I feel much more informed about why my nephrologist is adding semaglutide and what I should expect. The eGFR slope data is particularly encouraging — slowing the decline by 47% could mean years more before I'd need dialysis, if ever.

I'll share my labs after 6 months on the combination regimen.

9 5Dr.MetabolicMD, RetaRick_CA, JenPlateau and 6 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Similar Threads

Survodutide MASH Phase 2b — histological improvement data9 replies
Semaglutide and MASH — liver fat reduction quantification13 replies
Non-invasive MASH biomarkers — FibroScan, ELF, FIB-4 on GLP-110 replies
ALT normalization rates on GLP-1 — pooled trial data20 replies
GLP-1 hepatoprotection — direct vs indirect mechanisms16 replies
ForumsNewTrendingMembersAccount

Log In

Forgot password?
No account? Register